Opinion by
Plaintiff, as administrator of the estate of Paulina Charnetski, deceased, who owned a lot of ground in Luzerne County on which was erected a hotel and other buildings, sued to recover damages for injury to the premises, resulting from the withdrawal by defendant of vertical support in mining the underlying coal. Defendant denied, inter alia, that plaintiff’s decedent had the right of support, averring siich right had been waived by her predecessors in title. At the trial plaintiff offered in evidence all deeds in the line of title of both surface and minerals from the time the latter was severed and, on the evidence thus produced, the trial judge instructed the jury to return a verdict for defendant. From judgment entered plaintiff appealed.
The documentary evidence offered established that Thomas Stocker conveyed the surface to John Edward Goss in 1876, reserving the minerals, together with the “unqualified right to mine out and take out the whole of the same without opening for and transporting on and over the surface of said piece or parcel of land.”
Under the decisions of this court the above conveyance carried the right of surface support. “The law is firmly established in Pennsylvania that, in the absence of express waiver or the use of words from which the intention to waive clearly appears, the grantee of minerals
It appears that in 1886, by virtue of a sheriff’s deed, the interest of Goss was conveyed to Charles A. Miner and Isaac M. Thomas. Thomas later conveyed his interest to Miner, who, in 1893, conveyed to John J. Curry, reserving all the minerals with the unqualified right to mine or remove the whole or any part thereof “without any liability in any event whatever on the part of the vendors, their heirs, executors, administrators or assigns, or on the part of the owner or lessee of said coal and minerals, their heirs, executors, administrators or assigns, for any damage done to the surface of said lot or to the improvements thereon by reason of such mining and removing, or by reason of the mining and removing of any adjoining coal and minerals, the same being the property of the vendors herein, their lessees, heirs and assigns, it being understood that adequate and full compensation for any damage which will or may accrue to said surface has been liquidated and allowed in arriving at the consideration or purchase money aforesaid, and any right of action for any damage as aforesaid has been extinguished.” By subsequent conveyance the interest o,f Curry became vested in plaintiff’s decedent “subject to all the conditions and reservations in previous deeds contained, conveying the same land.”
The minerals were conveyed to defendant in part by deed in 1906 and in part by lease in 1905 from Stocker’s heirs, granting the right “to mine with prudence, skill and care......all the coal......but shall leave adequate and sufficient pillars to support the houses now erected upon said surface, and the said party of the second part shall be liable for any loss or damage that shall result or accrue to said parties of the first part for its failure to leave sufficient pillars to support the said houses.” It thus appears that while Miner acquired the surface from Goss in 1886 with the right of surface sup
The principles here involved are covered by the cases of Graff Furnace Co. v. Scranton Coal Co.,
Plaintiff argues that the present case is controlled by Robinson v. Boynton Coal Co.,
Plaintiff argues that a wrongdoer without title cannot, as against one in possession of land, justify or protect his trespass by showing an outstanding title in a stranger. This is undoubtedly the law but it does not apply to the facts in this case. The argument begs the question by assuming that deceased was in possession of the estate here in question, to wit, the right of support. Plaintiff’s own proof showed she was not, in fact, possessed of that right But njferely in possession of the surface with
The judgment is affirmed.
